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MongoDB Primary Keys Are Your Friend

Jun 22nd, 2013

All documents in a MongoDB collection have a primary key dubbed _id. This field is automatically assigned to a document upon insert, so there’s rarely a need to provide it. What’s interesting about the _id field is that it is time based. That is, the underlying type of _id, which is ObjectId, is a 12-byte BSON type, and 4 of those bytes represent the seconds since Unix epoch.

What’s also special about the _id field is that it is automatically indexed as you can see below by calling getIndexes on any collection.

And as everyone remembers from traditional RDBMSs, indexes are important because they can make document retrieval faster; nevertheless, indexes do consume memory and there is a slight performance penalty when inserting documents as all corresponding indexes must be updated. Thus, while you should seriously consider using indexes, you need to be economical in their usage.

Naturally, searching by a document’s _id is only convenient when you know it. More often than not, documents are searched via other fields and if you find yourself searching via a time series, such as created_at then you are in for a treat.

Imagine a collection dubbed logs that contains simple documents capturing various log messages. A sample document could look like so:

A simple document in a logs collection

123456

{"_id":ObjectId("51c4ab6d4d6906d494460728"),"message":"crashed, no such method exception","type":"crash","created_at":ISODate("2013-06-21T19:37:17.992Z")}

What if I wanted to find all log messages for some date, like today? I could write my query like so:

finding all logs created since June 20th, 2013

1

db.logs.find({created_at:{'$gt':newDate(2013,5,20)}})

If I throw an explain to that query, I can see that because I do not have an index on created_at, a basic cursor is leveraged and all documents in the collection were scanned in order to retrieve my result.

As you can see, searching via the created_at field can be inefficient; thus, you might be tempted to throw an index on that field. This would naturally make that particular query more efficient, however, you would incur the cost of a new index which is more memory consumed and inserts would be slightly slower due to an update to that newly created index.

As it turns out, because the _id field embeds Unix epoch in it, you can just as easily craft a find expression without including the created_at field. For example, the MongoDB Ruby driver allows you to create ObjectId’s from a Time like so:

As you can see, I’ve created a new ObjectId via the from_time factory method. 51c397800000000000000000 is a hexadecimal representation and the first 8 digits represent the time with everything else zeroed out. Note, you can create ObjectId types via some notion of time in other language drivers as well.

Now I can leverage my custom_id in any find expression. Via the Ruby driver, I can also attach an explain, which’ll demonstrate the usage of the free _id index.

If you see BtreeCusor, then you know you’re using an index; if you see BasicCursor, you know you’re not.

Thus, if you find yourself executing queries and creating indexes for some time or date field like created_at, you might be better off just using Mongo’s _id field as it already embeds the notion of created at and is indexed by default. Dig it?